use 5.008001; use strict; use warnings; package Log::Any::Test; # ABSTRACT: Test what you're logging with Log::Any our $VERSION = '1.717'; no warnings 'once'; $Log::Any::OverrideDefaultAdapterClass = 'Log::Any::Adapter::Test'; $Log::Any::OverrideDefaultProxyClass = 'Log::Any::Proxy::Test'; 1; __END__ =pod =encoding UTF-8 =head1 NAME Log::Any::Test - Test what you're logging with Log::Any =head1 VERSION version 1.717 =head1 SYNOPSIS use Test::More; use Log::Any::Test; # should appear before 'use Log::Any'! use Log::Any qw($log); # ... # call something that logs using Log::Any # ... # now test to make sure you logged the right things $log->contains_ok(qr/good log message/, "good message was logged"); $log->does_not_contain_ok(qr/unexpected log message/, "unexpected message was not logged"); $log->empty_ok("no more logs"); # or my $msgs = $log->msgs; cmp_deeply($msgs, [{message => 'msg1', level => 'debug'}, ...]); =head1 DESCRIPTION C is a simple module that allows you to test what has been logged with Log::Any. Most of its API and implementation have been taken from L. Using C signals C to send all subsequent log messages to a single global in-memory buffer and to make the log proxy provide a number of testing functions. To use it, load C before anything that loads C. To actually use the test methods, you need to load C and get a log object from it, as shown in the L. =head1 METHODS The test_name is optional in the *_ok methods; a reasonable default will be provided. =over =item msgs () Returns the current contents of the global log buffer as an array reference, where each element is a hash containing a I, I, and I key. e.g. { category => 'Foo', level => 'error', message => 'this is an error' }, { category => 'Bar::Baz', level => 'debug', message => 'this is a debug' } =item contains_ok ($regex[, $test_name]) Tests that a message in the log buffer matches I<$regex>. On success, the message is I from the log buffer (but any other matches are left untouched). =item does_not_contain_ok ($regex[, $test_name]) Tests that no message in the log buffer matches I<$regex>. =item category_contains_ok ($category, $regex[, $test_name]) Tests that a message in the log buffer from a specific category matches I<$regex>. On success, the message is I from the log buffer (but any other matches are left untouched). =item category_does_not_contain_ok ($category, $regex[, $test_name]) Tests that no message from a specific category in the log buffer matches I<$regex>. =item empty_ok ([$test_name]) Tests that there is no log buffer left. On failure, the log buffer is cleared to limit further cascading failures. =item contains_only_ok ($regex[, $test_name]) Tests that there is a single message in the log buffer and it matches I<$regex>. On success, the message is removed. =item clear () Clears the log buffer. =back =head1 SEE ALSO L, L =head1 AUTHORS =over 4 =item * Jonathan Swartz =item * David Golden =item * Doug Bell =item * Daniel Pittman =item * Stephen Thirlwall =back =head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE This software is copyright (c) 2017 by Jonathan Swartz, David Golden, and Doug Bell. This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself. =cut